José Carlos Millás

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José Carlos Millás
Born(1889-01-22)January 22, 1889
Miami, Florida
NationalityCuban
Alma materUniversity of Chicago
University of Havana
AwardsNational Order of Merit of Cuba
Order of the Aztec Eagle
Scientific career
FieldsMeteorology
InstitutionsNational Observatory of Cuba
University of Miami

José Carlos Millás (January 22, 1889 – November 28, 1965) was a Cuban meteorologist. He is known for his research on past Atlantic hurricane seasons, and has been called one of the "fathers of tropical meteorology".[1]

Born in Havana, Cuba, Millás graduated as a civil engineer from the University of Havana. He then took post-graduate courses at the University of Chicago. In 1913 he was appointed assistant director of the National Observatory of Cuba, becoming the institute's director in 1921. In the 1930s, before radar and refined hurricane-tracking equipment was available, Millás collaborated with R. W. Gray and Grady Norton of the Weather Bureau to plot the course of tropical cyclones.

Millás remained in that position at the National Observatory until 1961, when the Cuban Revolution forced him to emigrate to the United States. He became an assistant professor at the University of Miami and conducted research for the Weather Bureau until his death in 1965.

Millás was decorated with the National Order of Merit of Cub] and the Order of the Aztec Eagle.[citation needed]

Selected publications

  • ——— (1915), "The Origin and Course of West Indian Hurricanes",
  • ——— (1922), "Brief Description of a New Dial for the Aneroid", Monthly Weather Review, 50 (7): 359–360,
  • ——— (1966), Characteristics of the hurricane season in the North Atlantic Ocean including the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico, Miami: Institute of Marine Science
  • ——— (1968), Hurricanes of the Caribbean and adjacent regions, 1492-1800, Miami: Academy of the Arts and Sciences of the Americas

References

  1. ^ Volker, Al (February 11, 1969), "Hurricanes, 1492-1800", The Miami News

Further reading